Daydreaming Linked With Intelligence And Creativity

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Daydreaming may be a sign you are intelligent and creative, new research from Georgia Tech suggests.

“People with efficient brains may have too much brain capacity to stop their minds from wandering,”

said Eric Schumacher, Georgia Tech associate psychology professor and coauthor of the study. Schumacher and his students and colleagues, including lead coauthor Christine Godwin, measured the brain patterns of more than 100 people while they lay in an MRI machine.

The researchers instructed participants to focus on a stationary fixation point for five minutes. The team used the data to identify which parts of the brain worked in unison.

Higher Creative And Intellectual Ability

Godwin, a Georgia Tech psychology PhD candidate, explained;

“The correlated brain regions gave us insight about which areas of the brain work together during an awake, resting state. Interestingly, research has suggested that these same brain patterns measured during these states are related to different cognitive abilities.”

Once they figured out how the brain works together at rest, the team compared the data with tests the participants that measured their intellectual and creative ability. Participants also filled out a questionnaire about how much their mind wandered in daily life.

Those who reported more frequent daydreaming scored higher on intellectual and creative ability and had more efficient brain systems measured in the MRI machine.

“People tend to think of mind wandering as something that is bad. You try to pay attention and you can’t. Our data are consistent with the idea that this isn’t always true. Some people have more efficient brains,”

said Schumacher.

Schumacher went on to say higher efficiency means more capacity to think, and the brain may mind wander when performing easy tasks.

How can you tell if your brain is efficient? One clue is that you can zone in and out of conversations or tasks when appropriate, then naturally tune back in without missing important points or steps.

“Our findings remind me of the absent-minded professor—someone who’s brilliant, but off in his or her own world, sometimes oblivious to their own surroundings,” said Schumacher. “Or school children who are too intellectually advanced for their classes. While it may take five minutes for their friends to learn something new, they figure it out in a minute, then check out and start daydreaming.”

The researchers think their findings open the door for follow-up research to further understand when mind wandering is harmful, and when it may actually be helpful.

“There are important individual differences to consider as well, such as a person’s motivation or intent to stay focused on a particular task,”

Godwin said.

Reference: Christine A.Godwin, et al. Functional connectivity within and between intrinsic brain networks correlates with trait mind wandering. Neuropsychologia Volume 103, August 2017, Pages 140-153

 

Last Updated on December 23, 2022